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Old Revit

9 REPLIES 9
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Message 1 of 10
yes_and_no
635 Views, 9 Replies

Old Revit

I know a lot of places out there still using 2014 autocad and Revit 2017.

Why we still use Rv17 is above my pay grade Q&A.

But I wonder why, in general ?

I can guess my boss doesn't want to upgrade our PC, but what about other places, anyone ?

9 REPLIES 9
Message 2 of 10
edwin.prakoso
in reply to: yes_and_no

A common reason is that they have a project using an older Revit version. It's not good to upgrade the software in the middle of the project, so they may plan to upgrade after the project is finished. Some projects can take years to complete, and the pandemic can also cause a delay.

Many companies also don't upgrade the software every year.

Cheers,
Edwin Prakoso
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Message 3 of 10
RDAOU
in reply to: yes_and_no

 

  1. It is the first version he bought or was convinced him to get,
  2. Revit wasn't his call the first place
  3. From his perspective 2017 delivers what he wants, regardless if you need to do extra work to deliver it
  4. And last but not least, he believes that he is evading subscription costs

 

 

 

YOUTUBE | BIM | COMPUTATIONAL DESIGN | PARAMETRIC DESIGN | GENERATIVE DESIGN | VISUAL PROGRAMMING
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Message 4 of 10
yes_and_no
in reply to: yes_and_no

I also thought maybe from 2018 Rv starts to charge yearly, but 2017 backward is licensed for life.

Message 5 of 10
RDAOU
in reply to: yes_and_no

@yes_and_no 

 

I don't think so...If I am not mistaken, they ended perpetual licensing in 2014 or 2015 and switched to subscription. And now they also switched to log-in. Anyhow, I do not think it is just an issue of licensing type or license costs...but more about the percussion an upgrade can bring along with it. 

 

The guy says, it can run as is as long as we are not collaborating with anyone outside this office and the current workstations running 2017 perfectly fine and delivers what we need.

 

 

YOUTUBE | BIM | COMPUTATIONAL DESIGN | PARAMETRIC DESIGN | GENERATIVE DESIGN | VISUAL PROGRAMMING
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Message 6 of 10
yes_and_no
in reply to: RDAOU

I can see that.

Our engineers already use 2021, and we still sending out background in cad14. The benefit of bring in engineer model into ours is to check for conflict, which can be done without by using braincell, just like they have done that pre computer age. My boss says if there is a conflict, usually structure, then it is structure engineer to solve the problem, and we just simply send our R17 file for their benefit.

One of our engineers indeed keep a R17 version and work with us until CD phase started.

I also think that R17 make some great improvement and that's enough for our line of work.

Message 7 of 10
ToanDN
in reply to: yes_and_no

It is fine.  You can ask your consultants to export from Revit to IFC and link the IFCs in your R2017 model to do coordination/clash detection.  It's no different than working among different platforms (Revit, ArchiCAD, Trimble).  Plus the final coordination can be done in Navisworks, which doesn't care which versions of Revit you are using.

Message 8 of 10
yes_and_no
in reply to: ToanDN

Wow, this is excellent to know. I should have paid more attention when seeing people posts about IFC here. Thanks.

Let hope Rv won't take that option away from their next version.

Message 9 of 10
jj5809986
in reply to: yes_and_no

Many businesses choose not to upgrade their software because they do not want to disrupt their ongoing projects by doing so. As many projects take years to finish.

Message 10 of 10
RobDraw
in reply to: jj5809986


@jj5809986 wrote:

Many businesses choose not to upgrade their software because they do not want to disrupt their ongoing projects by doing so. As many projects take years to finish.


Not really. I have projects going in different versions. More than one version can be installed without "disrupting" previous projects.


Rob

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